Jim Saueressig
EF5
Tornado in Taipei, Taiwan May 12 2011
Good find, Jim. Interesting, as the wall cloud was rotating clockwise, and I'm pretty sure the tornado was rotating counter-clockwise. Being in the northern hemisphere, the tornado was cyclonic, but the parent wall cloud was anticyclonic? wtf?
..... the wall cloud was rotating clockwise, and I'm pretty sure the tornado was rotating counter-clockwise. Being in the northern hemisphere, the tornado was cyclonic, but the parent wall cloud was anticyclonic? wtf?
I may have bad vision but to me it seems that BOTH the wallcloud/meso AND also the tornado are anticyclonic ! I know , in the northern hemi cyclonic is much more frequent , but anticyclonic is not impossible.
Disagree - a cyclonic tornado with an anticyclonic supercell is about as unbelievably rare a tornado you will ever get. First, only about 2-3% of cyclonic storms will produce an anti-cyclonic tornado pair as the RFD bifurcates the updraft and causes a counter-rotating anticyclonic bookend vortex to the right of the main cyclonic vortex. Then, tornadoes from left-moving anticyclonic tornadoes are extremely rare, and have only been documented in the WSR-88D era about a dozen times, if that. What occurred on 5/10/10 in Oklahoma was the left-moving anticyclonic supercell counterpart to what I first describe: The main anticyclonic tornado had a secondary cyclonic vortex on the counter-rotating cyclonic bookend vortex to the *left* of the main anticyclonic vortex/tornado. That left-moving supercell, near Bray, OK, produced two anti-cyclonic tornadoes, one of which spun off a secondary counter-rotating cyclonic tornado. It has never been documented before, and thus is extremely rare.This phenomena is not that unusual (anticyclonic supercell, cyclonic tornado), to go to a recent example there was a very fast moving storm on the 05/10/10 that flew through Kansas or OK at 80mph as the left anticyclonic split and produced a cyclonic tornado.
here I found a video from much closer of that same tornado and it seems obvious to me that the tornado was ANTIcyclonic !
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3PaXT9J9KfQ
Disagree - a cyclonic tornado with an anticyclonic supercell is about as unbelievably rare a tornado you will ever get. First, only about 2-3% of cyclonic storms will produce an anti-cyclonic tornado pair as the RFD bifurcates the updraft and causes a counter-rotating anticyclonic bookend vortex to the right of the main cyclonic vortex. Then, tornadoes from left-moving anticyclonic tornadoes are extremely rare, and have only been documented in the WSR-88D era about a dozen times, if that. What occurred on 5/10/10 in Oklahoma was the left-moving anticyclonic supercell counterpart to what I first describe: The main anticyclonic tornado had a secondary cyclonic vortex on the counter-rotating cyclonic bookend vortex to the *left* of the main anticyclonic vortex/tornado. That left-moving supercell, near Bray, OK, produced two anti-cyclonic tornadoes, one of which spun off a secondary counter-rotating cyclonic tornado. It has never been documented before, and thus is extremely rare.
That all being said, the Taipei tornado is anticyclonic, under an anticyclonic low-level mesocyclone, and a very stout one to say the least. There are WSR-88Ds in Taiwan, so it would be interesting to get a hold of the archived radar data from that event to see if this came from a left-moving supercell.